History of Reconstructive Microsurgery: From Myth to Reality

Author(s):  
Isao Koshima
Author(s):  
G. Ian Taylor ◽  
Geoffrey G. Hallock

AbstractAnother congress of the World Society for Reconstructive Microsurgery (WSRM) this past year in Bologna was magnificent not just for the presentation of so many keynote lectures by the giants of our field nor the novel and innovative ideas shown by those who will someday follow in those footsteps, but by making all of us realize how many capable microsurgeons there are now practically everywhere in this world, doing incredibly important surgical management of challenges that previously were unmet and resulted in sheer devastation for so many of our patients. How much we are the same in our goals, aspirations, and abilities could not be overlooked, but it is amazing how much we also want to learn more together—each relying on the other. To do so, we must not forget our origins as we appropriately plan for the future. All this we philosophized in our WSRM panel on lower extremity reconstruction, while emphasizing on the surface the perforator flap that at the least today has caught everyone's attention. In this overview to follow, we once again tell two stories, starting with the beginnings of the concept of flaps in showing how the nomenclature has evolved over time according to our various surgical manipulations. Often overlooked, though, is a parallel timeline by the anatomists who have better elucidated the circulation to these flaps, where it will become obvious that often long ago the existence of perforators was recognized by them long before known by the surgeons. At least today, these two paths have at least temporarily intersected. Our pursuit of the “perforator” in the perforator skin flap has come full circle, following the course of the history of the flap itself—a pursuit of excellence.


2020 ◽  
Vol 34 (03) ◽  
pp. 133-138
Author(s):  
Hiko Hyakusoku ◽  
Shimpei Ono

AbstractSeveral pedicled flaps were developed by Hyakusoku at the Nippon Medical School Hospital, Tokyo, Japan, in the 1980s to treat a large number of patients with postburn contractures. In this setting, the propeller flaps were described for the first time in 1991. The term propeller was used because of the blade shape of the skin island rotating on its axis. In 1989, Koshima introduced the term perforator flaps, whereas Hallock, in 2006, applied the perforator flap concept to the propeller flap. The name perforator pedicled propeller flap followed. Propeller flap had developed to be an important operative technique and a hot topic in the field of reconstructive microsurgery, with the important contribution of Teo. In 2009, the First Tokyo Meeting on Perforator and Propeller Flaps was held, where Pignatti reported the consensus on the definition and classification of propeller flaps that was given by the advisory panel of the meeting. Further evolutions developed since then will be described in this dedicated issue of Seminars of Plastic Surgery.


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